Celebration Across the Subcontinent: India's Regional and National Festivals
India's festivals span Hindu, Muslim, Sikh, Jain, Buddhist, Christian, Parsi, and tribal traditions, each tied to specific regions, mythologies, and calendars. UPSC frequently tests festival-region-community pairing, ritual significance, and associated fairs like Kumbh and Pushkar.
Celebrated irrespective of religion; regional/cultural
Onam, Pushkar Mela, Gangaur, Pongal
Three National Festivals:
26th January — Republic Day
15th August — Independence Day
2nd October — Gandhi Jayanti
Hindu Festivals
Diwali (Deepawali)
Also called: Festival of Lights; 'Krishna Chaturdashi' by some Hindu clerics
When: Amavasya (new moon) in the month of Karthik (October/November)
Significance: Lord Rama's return to Ayodhya after 14-year exile; victory of light over darkness; emergence of Goddess Lakshmi from Samudra Manthan
Day before:Naraka Chaturdasi — marks Lord Krishna's victory over demon Naraka
Rituals: Lakshmi Puja, Chopad Puja (Karma Yoga connection), lighting of homes
Jain significance: Day when Mahavira attained Nirvana
Regional variation: In Bengal, Goddess Kali is worshipped instead of Lakshmi
Sharad Purnima
Falls 15 days before Diwali on the full moon — called Navanna Purnima
Ritual: drinking saffron-coloured milk under moonlight = Kojagiri
Torch-lit procession of Goddess Durga = Chhabina
Holi
Also called: Festival of Colours
When: Month of Phalgun (end Feb/early March); marks beginning of spring
Two days: Chhoti Holi (Holika Dahan — burning of demoness Holika; good over evil; saving Bhakt Prahlad) + Rang (Day of Colour — celebrates Krishna-Radha love)
Regional versions:
Vrindavan/Mathura → Lathmar Holi (women beat men with sticks)
Rural Maharashtra → Rangapanchami
West Bengal/Assam → Basant Utsav or Dhol Jatra
Makar Sankranti
When: Usually 14th January
Dedicated to the Sun God; celebrates Sun's movement to northern hemisphere
Makar = Capricorn; Sankranti = transition
Marks beginning of Uttarayan; associated with harvest, kite-flying, cattle fairs
Pilgrims visit Ganga Sagar and Prayag for holy dip
Janmashtami
Birth anniversary of Lord Krishna
When: Month of Shravan (July/August); calculated by lunar calendar
Marked by Ras Leela and Krishna Leela performances
Himachal Pradesh → Natti Dance for 9 days; Lord Raghunath worshipped
Ram Navami
Birth anniversary of Lord Rama
When: Month of Chaitra (March/April)
Special locations: Ayodhya (Ram Janambhoomi) and Puducherry (Kanaka Bhawan Temple)
Durga Puja
Celebrates Goddess Durga's triumph over demon Mahisasura
When: September/October
Bengali Durga Puja: Five days from Shashti (6th day); culminates on 10th day (DurgoPujo); clay idol immersed in river (symbolises Durga's return to Lord Shiva)
Mysore → called Dasara
Gujarat → called Navratri (with Garba and Dandia dances)
Tamil Nadu → 9 days: first 3 = Lakshmi, next 3 = Durga, last 3 = Saraswati
Ganesh Chaturthi
Birth anniversary of Lord Ganesha (son of Shiva and Parvati; elephant face; first among Hindu gods)
When: 4th day of Bhadra (August/September)
Major states: Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu
Initiated by Shivaji to promote Hinduism against Mughals
Revived in 1893 by Bal Gangadhar Tilak to unite people against British ban on public gatherings
Idol immersion = Visarjan
Karva Chauth
Observed by Hindu women for their husband's well-being
When: 4th day after full moon in Karthik (October/November) — also called Karthikki Chauth
Fast starts before sunrise; broken only after sighting the moon
Ritual food from mother-in-law = Sargi; Goddess invoked = Gaur Mata
Rath Yatra (Puri, Odisha)
Location: Puri (Neelachal Srikshetra), Odisha — one of the biggest festivals
When: 2nd day of Ashadha (June/July)
Three deities: Lord Jagannath (Nandighosha rath), Lord Balabhadra (Taladhwaja rath), Goddess Subhadra (Devadalana rath)
Idols (made of wood) taken from Sri Mandir to Shri Gundicha temple for a week
Celebrations date back to at least the 9th century
Mahashivratri
Celebrates Lord Shiva
When: 14th day of Magha (February/March) — darkest day of the month
Lord Shiva manifested as Jyotirlinga (flaming lingam); performed Tandava dance
Devotees carry Ganga water to offer at Shivalinga; fast + night vigil
Chhath
Dedicated to Sun God (Surya); Vedic origins
When: 6th day of lunar fortnight of Kartik — six days after Diwali
State festival of Bihar; also celebrated in northern and eastern India and Nepal
4-day festival with rigorous fasting, holy bath, offerings to rising and setting Sun
Muslim Festivals
Eid-ul-Fitr
Celebrated at the end of Ramadan (9th month of Islamic calendar)
Falls on 1st day of Shawwal (10th month) after moon sighting
Ramadan significance: Quran revealed (~27th day); Prophet won Battle of Badr; martyrdom of Ali on 21st day
Id-ul-Zuha (Id-ul-Azha / Bakr-Eid)
When: 10th day of Dhu-al-Hijjah (12th month)
Commemorates Prophet Ibrahim's devotion to Allah (sacrifice of son; God accepted goat)
Ram is sacrificed; 1/3rd meat given to the poor
Marks beginning of Hajj (pilgrimage to Mecca)
Milad-Un-Nabi (Barah-wafat)
Birth + death anniversary of Prophet Muhammad
When: 12th day of Rabi-al-Awwal (3rd month)
Barah = twelve; wafat = death (12 days of sickness before death)
Scholars recite Qasida al-Burda Sharif (13th century poem by Arabic Sufi Busiri); also sing Nats
Prophet's relics displayed at Hazratbal Shrine, Srinagar (Kashmir)
Muharram
When: 1st month of Islamic calendar (Islamic New Year on 1st day)
10th day = Yaum-al-ashura — day of mourning for Shia Muslims
Commemorates martyrdom of Hussain Bin Ali (grandson of Prophet) at Battle of Karbala in 61 Hijri (680 AD)
India: processions called Tajia; black clothes; sherbet distributed
Shab-e-Barat
'Night of Emancipation' — observed between 14th and 15th day of Shaban (8th month)
Destiny of every person believed to be determined on this night
Shia Muslims celebrate 15th Shaban as birth anniversary of Imam Muhammad Al-Mahdi (12th imam)
Shab-e-Miraj
'Night of Ascent' — Prophet's spiritual journey to nearness of Almighty
When: 27th day of Rajab, 2 years before Hijra
On this journey, five daily prayers were made obligatory for Muslims
Christian Festivals
Christmas
25th December — Birth anniversary of Jesus Christ
Midnight mass on night of 24th–25th December
Traditions: Christmas Tree + Santa Claus
Easter & Good Friday
Easter = Resurrection of Jesus (3 days after crucifixion); triumph of life over death
Date fixed by Council of Nicene (325 AD): first Sunday after first full moon following vernal equinox (~21st March = Paschal full moon)
Good Friday = Crucifixion of Jesus Christ; falls in April
Sikh Festivals
Gurpurab
Birth anniversaries of all 10 Sikh Gurus; most important: Guru Nanak and Guru Gobind Singh
Important martyrdom Gurpurabs: Guru Arjan Dev and Guru Tegh Bahadur (both martyred by Mughals)
Rituals: Akhand Path, Prabhat Pheris (congregational singing of Shabds), procession of Guru Granth Sahib on floral float, Panj Pyare (five beloved men = 5 armed guards with Nishan Sahibs)
Parkash Utsav Dasveh Patshah
Birthday of 10th Sikh Guru Gobind Singh — celebrated on 31st January
Maghi
When: 14th January
Celebrated in Muktsar in memory of 40 Sikh martyrs (Chalis Mukte) who fought the Mughals
Guru Govind Singh died fighting Wazir Khan (Mughal emperor) in 1705
Hola Mohalla
Beginning of Sikh New Year; held at Anandpur Sahib on 2nd day of lunar month Chett (March)
Started by Guru Govind Singh for mock battles, military exercises, kirtan and poetry
Also known as 'Sikh Olympics'
Vaisakhi
13th or 14th April every year
Celebrates Sikh New Year and birthday of Khalsa Panth
Spring harvest festival
Lohri
13th January (day before Makar Sankranti); month of Magh
Celebrates fertility; bonfires; victory of light over darkness
Sodal Mela
Main fair of Punjab; held in Jalandhar in month of Bhadon (September)
Pays homage to Baba Sodal; Sodal ka Sarovar (holy tank)
Jain Festivals
Mahavir Jayanti
Birth anniversary of Lord Mahavira — 24th Tirthankara, founder of Jainism
When: 13th day of rising moon in Chaitra
Idol bathed with milk (Abhishek); carried in procession; saffron flag displayed
Special relevance: Parshvanath Temple (Kolkata), Hastinapur (UP), Pawapuri (Bihar)
Paryushana
Annual festival of Jains in Bhadrapada (August/September)
Svetambara sect: 8 days; Digambara sect: 10 days
Rituals: visit to Upashrayas, discourses on Kalpa Sutra, Pratikraman (meditation)
Ends with Kshamavami (forgiveness day): phrase — "Micchami Dukkadam"
Mahamastakabhisheka
Held once in 12 years at Shravanabelagola, Karnataka
Holy bathing ceremony of 57 ft high statue of Siddha Bahubali (son of Rishabhdev)
Bathed with milk, sugarcane juice, saffron paste; sprinkled with sandalwood, turmeric, vermilion
Other Jain Festivals
Gyana Panchami — 5th day of Kartika; 'Knowledge Day'; holy scriptures displayed
Varshi Tapa / Akshay Tritiya — related to 1st Tirthankara Rishabhdev's 13-month-13-day fast
Maun-Agiyara — 11th day of Magshar month; complete silence + fasting + meditation
Navapad Oli — 9-day period of semi-fasting; one meal/day; comes twice a year (Mar/Apr and Sep/Oct)
Buddhist Festivals
Buddha Purnima (Buddha Jayanti)
Birth anniversary of Lord Buddha
When: April/May; celebrated in North-East India
Called Saga Dawa (Dasa) in Sikkim; Vishakha Puja in Theravada tradition
Key locations: Sarnath (UP), Bodh Gaya (Bihar)
Mahayana Buddhists: large procession with gyalings and rabdungs; read Kangyur texts
Theravada Buddhists: only ceremonial prayers
Hemis Gompa
Held at Hemis Gompa Monastery, Ladakh
Birth anniversary of Guru Rinpoche (Padmasambhava) — founder of Tibetan Buddhism
Main attraction: Mask dance by Lamas
Losar Festival
Marks Tibetan New Year; celebrated in Arunachal Pradesh
Celebrated by Mahayana Buddhist tribes: Sherdukpens, Khamba, Memba, Monpa
Begins 11 February; 3 days:
Offerings to Palden Lhamo (Dharampala); greeting = Tashi Delek
Gyalpo Losar — national leaders and kings remembered
Choe-Kyong Losar — offerings to elders; prayer flags tied to rooftops
Ulambana (Ancestor Day)
1st to 15th days of the 8th lunar month
Gates of Hell believed open; ghosts visit for 15 days; food offered
15th day = Ulambana/Ancestor Day — cemetery visits
Songkran
Buddhist festival observed as spring cleaning (mid-April); sprinkle perfumed water on monks
Losoong Festival (Sikkim)
Celebrates Sikkimese New Year; celebrated in December in Sikkim
Festival of Bhutia tribe (now also Lepchas)
Traditional wine = Chaang; dances: Cham Dance + Black Hat Dance
Parsi (Zoroastrian) Festivals
Festival
When
Occasion
Jamshedi Navroz
1st day of Parsi month MahFravardin (Shehanshahi calendar)
Parsi New Year; pay respect to Khorshed and MeherYazads
Zarthost No Deeso
11th day of 10th month (June)
Death anniversary of Prophet Zoroaster
Khordad Sal
6th day of Parsi month Farvardin (Aug/Sep)
Birth anniversary of Prophet Zoroaster
Pateti
Last Gatha day of Parsi Calendar
Repentance for year's sins
Sindhi Festivals
Chaliho Sahib — 40-day fast (July–August); prayers to Lord Jhulelal; ends as Thanks Giving Day; origin: Muslim invader Mirkshah troubled Hindus of Thatta; they prayed to Varun Devta for 40 days
Cheti Chand — Sindhi New Year; 1st day of Chaitra; birth of Jhulelal (patron saint of Sindhis); Baharana Sahib taken to river
Secular Festivals
Gangaur Festival
Most important spring festival of Rajasthan; roots in medieval Rajput times
Celebrated in honour of Goddess Parvati (Gauri) — wife of Lord Shiva
Celebrates spring, harvest, and marital fidelity; unmarried women pray for good husband
Khajuraho Dance Festival
Instituted in 1975 by Government of India in collaboration with MP Kala Parishad
Purpose: promote tourism; highlight beauty of Khajuraho temples
Regional New Year Names
Name
State
Ugadi / Chaitra Shudhdha Paadyami
Andhra Pradesh & Karnataka
Gudi Pahwa / Gudi Pava
Maharashtra
Samvatsar Padvo
Goa
Naba Barsha (Poila Boisakh)
West Bengal
Puthandu
Tamil Nadu
Vishu
Kerala
Cheiraoba
Manipur (month of Sajibu, April)
Losar
Arunachal Pradesh (11 Feb)
Losoong
Sikkim (December)
Bohag/Rongali Bihu
Teej
3rd day of Shravan (July/August); celebrated in Rajasthan, Bihar, UP
Three types: Haryali Teej, Kajari Teej, Hartalika Teej
Sair-e-Gulfaroshan (Phool Walon Ki Sair)
Annual festival of flowers in Old Delhi; symbol of communal harmony
Pankhas (flower-decorated palm leaf fans) taken from tomb of Khwaja Bakhtiyar Kaki (Mehrauli) to Jog Maya Temple
Origin: Queen Mumtaz Mahal, wife of Mughal emperor Akbarshah II (19th century)
Banned by British; reinstated in 1962
Tyagaraja Aradhana
Commemorates Samadhi day of Tamil saint-composer Tyagaraja
Held annually in January near Thanjavur on banks of Kaveri
'Bond of protection'; sisters tie silk threads on brothers' wrists
When: Full moon day in Shravan; also significant for Jain community
Onam
State festival of Kerala; month of Chigam (first month of Malayalam calendar)
Harvest festival + celebrates homecoming of King Mahabali from Patala
Feature: Vallamkali (Snake Boat race) — most popular at Punnamada Lake → winners get Nehru Boat Race Trophy
Traditional games: Onakanikal
Pongal
Harvest festival of Tamils; celebrated 13–16 January
Marks beginning of Uttarayan (Sun's northward journey)
Pongal = 'to boil' in Tamil; held in month of Thai
Boiling of first rice is the main ritual
Sarhul
New Year festival for tribals of Jharkhand
Celebrated by Munda, Oraon and Ho tribes
Literally means 'Worship of Sal'; spring season (month of Phagun)
Festivals of North-East India
Festival
State
Community/Tribe
Key Feature
Bihu
Assam
All communities
3 types: Bohag/Rongali, Kati/Kongali, Maagh/Bhogali; Gamosa exchanged; Pitha prepared; Gora Bihu (cattle bathed) on 1st day
Hornbill Festival
Nagaland
All Naga tribes
Begins 1st December; week-long; held at Kisama Heritage Village; Kohima Night Bazaar
Kharchi Puja
Tripura
Royal family (now all)
10 days in July; 14 deities in Puran Haveli, Old Agartala; ordered by Lord Shiva
Cheiraoba
Manipur
Manipuri tribes
New Year (April, month of Sajibu); deity Sanamahi; Chahitaba selected for year's sins; people climb hills
Wangala
Meghalaya
Garo tribe
Post-harvest; 2nd week November; near Tura, Garo Hills; deity = ; village chief = ; also called ; feathered head-gear
Major Fairs of India
Fair
Location
River/Feature
Key Facts
Kumbh Mela
Allahabad, Haridwar, Nashik-Trimbak, Ujjain
Ganga-Yamuna-Saraswati / Ganga / Godavari / Shipra
Largest religious gathering in world; held once in 3 years at diff. places; 12 years at same place; dates by zodiac position of Sun, Moon, Jupiter; Simhastha Kumbh at Nashik/Ujjain when planet in Leo; Ardh-Kumbh at Haridwar/Allahabad every 6 years; Maha Kumbh once in 144 years; Maagh Kumbh annually in Allahabad
Sonepur Mela
Sonepur, Bihar
Ganga-Gandak confluence
Largest cattle fair in Asia; Kartik Poornima; only fair where elephants are sold; Chandragupta Maurya legend
Pushkar Fair
Pushkar, Rajasthan
Pushkar Lake
Largest camel and cattle fair; starts Kartik Poornima; lasts a week
Unity in Diversity: India's 3 national festivals and dozens of religious/secular festivals reflect the constitutional vision of a plural democracy where all communities coexist.
Religion–Agriculture–Calendar Linkage: Most Indian festivals (Pongal, Onam, Bihu, Makar Sankranti, Chhath, Wangala) are directly tied to harvest cycles and seasonal transitions, reflecting the agrarian roots of Indian civilization.
Cultural Preservation via Festivals: Festivals like Hornbill (Nagaland), Wangala (Meghalaya), and Dree (Arunachal Pradesh) serve as living museums of tribal traditions, language, costume, and music.
Syncretic / Composite Culture: Sair-e-Gulfaroshan (Phool Walon Ki Sair) and several Sufi-linked observances reflect India's composite heritage that transcends religious boundaries.
UNESCO Recognition: The Kumbh Mela was inscribed on UNESCO's Intangible Cultural Heritage list in 2017 — the world's largest peaceful gathering.
Modern Relevance: Ganesh Chaturthi's revival by Tilak in 1893 shows how cultural festivals have been instruments of political mobilisation and national consciousness.
Similar to Rath Yatra (Puri); 8 days in July; begins at Sri Govindajee Temple, Imphal; chariots called 'Kang'
Ambubachi Mela
Assam
All
Kamakhya Temple, Guwahati; June; dubbed 'Mahakumbh of the East'; fertility rituals; temple closed 3 days
Sekrenyi
Nagaland
Angami tribe
February (25th of Kezei month); 10 days; also called 'Phousanyi'; first-day ritual = 'Dzuseva' (men bathe in village well)
Majuli Festival
Assam
All
November; at Namghar; organized by Dept. of Culture, Assam
Lui-Ngai-Ni
Nagaland/Manipur
Naga tribes
15th February; post-harvest/seed-sowing; message of peace and harmony
Dree Festival
Arunachal Pradesh
Apatani tribe
5th July; Ziro valley; prayers to Tamu, Metii, Danyi, Harniang; cucumber distributed as symbol of good harvest
Saga Dawa
Sikkim
Buddhist
Full moon of Tibetan month Saga Dawa (May–June); commemorates birth, enlightenment, death (parinirvana) of Buddha; three teachings: dana (generosity), sila (morality), bhavana (meditation)